Monday, February 7, 2011

Never Say Goodbye--1983

Grrr. Yet another name for a book that fails to disclose a hint of the awesomeness beyond.  I did a Google-image search for the cover and no less than four other authors had the same title.  The Great Betty herself had three other titles that began with 'Never'.  In the interests of disclosing the delights within, might I suggest another? (cough* feelfreetousethecoverart*cough) 

Isobel Barrington, 25, doesn't like private nursing.  (What Neels heroine does?)  She's plain but pert and due to her seven year stint hitch-hiking through India as a practitioner of Bikram Yoga she's also wicked-agile and in unity with the universe.  (Though that could be the ankle tattoo talking.)
No, I jest.  Isobel is a little starchy in her neat blue uniform and she's not about to let herself be pushed around by this disapproving, if hot, hot, kill-joy.
Dr. Thomas Winter is as cold as his name.  He lives in a gorgeous and frigid ice palace and takes one look at the young woman warming up his sitting room and just knows she's trouble.  But the pickings are slim and he needs someone fast.  His old Nanny, Mrs. Olbinski, lives in Poland (in 1983!) and since her husband has died she needs to be smuggled out of the country. 
No, not smuggled.  (Dang it!  I had just jury-rigged a diversionary device made from sugarless gum, a book of matches and a men's XXL wool suit coat.)  There are papers and processes but they should just be able to sail out of Gdansk.  And so, leaving her widowed mother (and public school fee-needing shadow sibling, Bobby) behind, she heads to their first stop, Sweden, with Dr. Winter.  
On the way there, she attempts to solve the enigma wrapped in a riddle that is her employer.  'I expect you're married.'  His look was meant to freeze her bones, only she wasn't that kind of girl.  She returned his stare with twinkling eyes.  'You expect wrongly, Miss Barrington.'  He looked down his patrician nose.  'Perhaps it would be better if I were to address you as Nurse.'  'Yes, Dr. Winter.' The twinkle was so disconcerting that he looked away still frowning. 
And their relationship goes on from there.  He attempts to be quelling (which she regrets as she sees the warm and kind man he can be while they stay with his friends) and she just refuses to be anything other than herself--restful, full of common sense and able to meet any circumstances.
And then they set off for Poland...in the midst of The Cold War.
Mr. Olbinski was a Polish dissident possibly like 1983 Nobel Peace Prize winner (and mustachioed babe) Lech Walesa
Perhaps you are wondering what The Great Betty had to say on the subject of the Cold War.  Answer:  Next to nothing.  We get an entire Polish interlude wherein the words communism, Cold War, Soviet Russia, Iron Curtain and NATO are not mentioned.  The closest we get to any concrete discussion of the repressive  regime is the factoid that Nanny's husband was a dissident (and lived a nice long life and presumably died of natural causes) and this little gem from Isobel's mother:  'Poland?  But isn't that,' she paused, 'well, eastern Europe.'  Well, yes, Mrs. Barrington.  It was.  It still is, as a matter of fact.  And the Poles themselves?  La Neels essentially compresses the lyrics of 'Russians Love Their Children Too' into a quip about how well the British are liked in Poland.  (Just go with it.)
We get the teensiest glimpse of a bona fide apparatchik when someone, who doesn't even have the decency to sound much like a commie goon, comes to the shabby apartment to tell Dr. Winter that Nanny's papers are not entirely ready.
They do some sight-seeing to pass the time and (we find out later) Thomas buys an amber necklace that Isobel admires.
Editorial Note: I don't know what was going through his head at this point.  I like to think that, even then, he recognized her as someone special (they do share a hand squeeze over some sublime organ music) but I can't quite bring myself to believe that he's already been bitten by the love bug.
They eventually return to Sweden and Isobel has a chance to showcase her exceptionally good cooking skills, formidable work ethic and ability to bond with old ladies.
And then they're back in London.  Almost as soon as they've taken their coats off, a whirl of blonde and pampered loveliness flings herself at Thomas.  Meet Miss Ella Stokes.  Ouch, you're thinking.  Isn't she a bit beneath his dignity?  Yes, she is.  But he's not shopping for a wife and Ella is at least manageable.  The doctor is well able to control his feelings around her so she's suitable as far as maintaining his lonely and independent existence goes.
Nanny proceeds over the next week to develop a thorough disapproval of that immodest 'saucebox' and an abiding attachment to Isobel--who treats Nanny like a treasured relation instead of a paycheck.  And for her part, Nanny can see that Thomas and Isobel are made for each other.
Thomas is 'preoccupied'--a clue so subtle that if you blink you will miss it.  Nanny has told him to mend his wicked ways and get married (anyone but the saucebox!) and he's grappling with feelings which approach attraction to that impertinent but warm-hearted nurse.  What to do?  What to do?
'Do you have a boyfriend, Isobel?'
That did not just come out of his own mouth, he must be thinking.  She answers him calmly enough but he's spooked enough to be gone before Isobel has to leave in a few days.
And that's when Isobel realizes that she's in love with him.  
Nanny's in tears.  (You have to put on your detective hat to realize that she's been sure that Thomas and Isobel would get together and if he's taking off now...Hankies!)
But Isobel sees him one more time before he goes.  'You feel I should have wished you goodbye, Isobel?  By all means let us do the thing properly, then.'  And he kisses her into next week.
Fast forward a week or two.  Thomas has sent a parting gift with a stiff little note--the amber necklace which she wears beneath her blouses.  She's just finishing another maddening private nursing job when Thomas shows up to collect her from Mother's house.  Nanny has been contracting pneumonia.  Thomas has been wrestling his demons.  And when Mrs. Barrington asks 'How long will Isobel be with you?' it is all he can do not to enunciate slowly, 'For.ev.er.'
She nurses Nanny and they are eventually moved to his 'cottage' (read: des res, Hat tip, Betty Magdalen) by the sea for further recuperation--an excuse for Thomas to surprise her in a bikini and surprise her with Mother and Bobby (oh yeah, Bobby).  Everyone is thrilled to bits with everyone else and Mrs. Barrington and Nanny are already sewing baby-layettes out of daydreams.  (Heck, so is Thomas at this point.)
They reconvene briefly in London and Thomas corners her about that suspicious bump under her neckline. (Haul your minds out of the Brighton sewer system!)  'Why don't you want me to see that you wear the amber necklace?' 'It reminds me of Poland.'  His response is aggravated.  Why won't she just admit she likes him?  'I need nothing to remind me of Poland--or, for that matter, of you.'  And then he kisses her into next month.
But the next month isn't a very fun place to be.  Thomas has gone on a prolonged vacation (presumably with Ella in the Caribbean--Doesn't he know how near America that is?!) and Isobel returns home to find her mother laid out on the floor with a stroke.  She grows thin with worry over money and nursing her mother around the clock and longing for Thomas to come when she knows that he won't.
He finally does and ruthlessly shames her into letting him admit Mother into a rehabilitation hospital.  (I'm sure he hates doing it but plain speaking is the only thing that will force her to accept the help he is dying to give.)  And when Isobel has rested herself at Thomas' house she sets off to find another job--hopefully one that deals with night shifts or mental patients so it will pay well.
Her next case is a twofer: an insomniac head case that provides her ample opportunity to think.  To forget him was going to be impossible, but to encourage thoughts of him was just plain stupid.  Thomas comes breathing hellfire down on her head for taking 12-hour-shifts.  He confiscates her pets and Isobel's control slips enough to suck her into an Ella-induced death spiral (Pull up!  Pull up!) wherein she babbles about honeymoons and best wishes and a lot of other old trot.
Isobel's Death Spiral
The Venerable Neels thrusts one more child (it's quite a habit with her) under the careening bus of True Love's Bliss.  She arranges for Thomas' godson to have the measles.  Isobel takes the case and never guesses that Thomas was behind the hiring (as he was also secretly behind having Bobby (you remember Bobby) sent off on vacation).  She has a lovely time (getting fat and rested) and at the end is collected by Thomas.  Why can't she seem to shake him?
Because he loves her.
They seal the deal on a hillside overlooking her childhood home (which he has just repurchased for Mother and what's-his-name to live in).
The End


Rating: I didn't remember loving this one all that much when I first read it--I think I was thrown a little off-balance by how unusual it is (Polish dissidents!), I had read Nanny as a more dour personality than she is and maybe I'd missed the subtle but numerous clues that Thomas' heart was lost early on.  So, I'm not speaking lightly when say that after this read this might be my new favorite Neels.  (I left a ton of wonderfulness out of the review.)
Thomas is deeply lonely (lonely enough to undertake a trip to Poland to bring back an old Nanny and lonely enough to tolerate Ella and Her Dance of the Seven Veils Shtick at all) and doesn't quite believe that he needs a wife (which is why we're okay with Ella being so awful...Thomas wasn't looking for deep and informative 7-part docudramas.  Instead, was channel surfing and she was the midnight infomercial he tuned into.  ('Set it and Forget it!)). The Great Betty was so consistent with him--he never, late in the book, says anything like, 'He really didn't know why he couldn't stop thinking about her...', negating all those signs he's given that he is being purposeful. (And you know La Neels did that a time or two.)  Nope.  He's in love and maybe flounders for a bit but that's as far as it goes.  And yes, Ella is draped like a stinking red herring all over the place but, aside from using her to get a little response from Isobel, her clinging is explained as just that.
Isobel is perfect--she's plain enough to never consider chasing Thomas (so, oddly, had she been prettier, she never would have got her foot in the door) and never loses her nerve or common sense.  Sure, she can't bring herself to be so twinkling at him after she realizes that he's the one for her (being caught in a never-to-be-reciprocated-love would put the damper on anyone's sense of humor), but she doesn't let her feelings for him send her back into any sort of shell. And if he needs telling off, she's still happy to do it.
Mother and Nanny are darling--watching the proceedings with enough knowing smiles and indiscretion to let the reader in on their secret. 
Bobby is a shadow sibling par excellence.  (Providing the important plot device of being a  financial drain with no pesky hanging about.)
Lashings of whipped cream, for this Betty.

Food: There was a lot but here is some of the more interesting offerings--Sprats, pancakes with jam, Aquavit 'for the men', smörgåsbord, hot beet soup, crayfish, pork knuckle, vastkustsallad, seafood pancakes and apricot flan.

Fashion: A coffee-colored skirt paired with a shrimp pink blouse, a Liberty print blouse, a cream linen dress which douses her coloring, neat blue uniforms, and her treasured amber necklace that she tucks away inside her bodice (which is such a wonderful metaphor for the whole thing).  Ella is a 'vision' in a sky-blue suede skirt and blouse ('its buttons undone to what Isobel considered to be a quite indecent level').  She also dons a sheer silk blouse with nothing on underneath but her flesh!
Highlights for Isobel are the bikini (which I don't even approve of in real life but thank The Great Betty for on my knees) and a faded but flattering sundress.  The lowlight is when he walks into her house after mother's stroke to see her wearing a plastic pinny with 'All Hands on Deck' across the front.

48 comments:

  1. Agghhh! I'm behind. Ironically, the book from last summer (I've done all of May, June & July!!) is Never While the Grass Grows, so I'll be reading Never, Never, Never all in a row! Alas, Never While the Grass Grows is lo-o-ong, and I didn't finish it in time to read Never Say Goodbye for today. But I'll get `em done!

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  2. Okay, wait, wait, wait!--"Thomas has gone on a prolonged vacation (presumably with Ella in the Caribbean)"?!? This seems to be well into the book--say what? Explain please, 'cause otherwise he falls into a James Bond-cad-behavior abyss (The RD/BD may have had a past--"He is no monk, Charity Dawson!"--but the activities always take place before the book opens).

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  3. He goes on vacation, alright, but it's Ella who chases him down and sticks with their group of friends like a limpet.

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    1. But he says he went on holiday to the Caribbean with Ella for two weeks, then later on he says it was Italy and Ella got herself invited along... so I want to know, when did Italy move to the Caribbean and why hasn't anyone noticed yet?
      Betty van den Lurkdom

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    2. Caribbean/ Italy: Betty Barbara noticed when we did the Reprise last year: Possible Continuity glitch I caught this time...

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  4. ...I should also include that everyone seems to know what a hardship this was for Thomas and that he uses Ella's presence (the only good he got out of it) to spur Isobel into declarations of her feelings (the death spiral).

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  5. I don't know if I WANT to read a book about Cold War Poland that doesn't have communist bad guys. You know how I like my red villains.

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  6. If it helps, there is a curfew and some worries about being watched and monitored but, despite my best hopes, a shoot-out failed to materialize.

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    1. shoot-out failed to materialize
      Went to see a Gene Hackman movie with a friend once. With some bad East Germans in it. At one point, my friend and I had to laugh. Heads turned - because we were the only ones who did. The subtitles read "Shoot him, shoot him." The bad East German had voiced a literal translation of those words, "Schießt ihn, schießt ihn." Sounded funny to us because you can't say that in German. Somebody obviously hadn't done their homework.

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    2. And that may have been the best laugh we had during the movie.

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  7. This may be a Betty that I haven't read! There are about 10 that I haven't found yet. It sure sounds like I need to dig this one up though.

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  8. Uh, is that Isobel behind James's oops Thomas' ear on Betty Keira's cover?

    "All Hands on Deck" on the bodice front of an apron? Hmmmm....Where's Betty Magdalen?

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  9. No, no, with her shirt unbuttoned to her belly-button, it is clearly Ella. But, notice he has a gun there to fend off rapacious females...

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  10. Betty Barbara here--
    Trying again to comment on this book. My first comment is floating around in the ether somewhere.
    I can't rave as much as Betty Keira. I loved Isobel, but found Thomas to be just a bit dour.
    I thought Betty did her usual job of treating the political situation as nothing to be excited about--that's just the way it was.
    As for skullduggery and derring-do, I had gotten the impression that sums of money changed hands in order to finalize Nanny's exit papers. Not as exciting as a shoot-out, but....

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    1. I read this book a few years ago. And it was so weird, after reading dozens of Dutch settings, to be in Communist country. It FELT unNeelishly somber at times....the rigid curfew in Poland and the bribe (yes, money did exchange hands--almost certain of that) and the final hour urgent departure.

      The whole stroke scene was kinda grim, too.

      I felt it showed Betty in a new light.

      Cannot remember being gobsmacked by its goodness, bit I did like it. For sure!
      Will give it another look.

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    2. Welcome, Betty Undercover. Yes, Poland was a bit dark but it was wonderfully bookended with scenes from Stockholm (I think it was Stockholm?).

      I could've sworn that couple, Carl and Christina Janssen, appeared as side characters in another book. It's the one where the RRD and the Olivia-esque heroine was having a meal in a restaurant and Carl stops by the table and chats with the RDD. And the RDD asks after his wife Christina. The Olivia later was upset that the RDD had brought previous girlfriends to the same restaurant.... Some-Betty, help me out! I'm having a memory lapse and grasping at elusive wisps of Betty Neels.

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    3. Oh, and don't forget that BN also treated us to an even more somber subject than Communism, and that would be Nazism. Remember Jan with the concentration camp tatoo in Cassandra by Chance? And in the first Neels book ever, Sister Peters in Amsterdam, Coenrad's impaired sight was due to the involvement with the Underground against the Nazis.

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    4. Interesting. I have not yet read Sister Peters. Is it good?

      I will look into my magic Betty Box and find Cassandra...haven't read it for a decade, at least. Given that the Neelsettes rate it very high, I will be eager to re-read.

      No idea what other book you are referring to, sorry.

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    5. Sister Peters in Amsterdam is the very first Neels. It's a must. It's a great book, one of my favourites.
      Betty Anonymous

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  11. I don't have 'Never Say Goodbye'. Is that the same as 'No Need to say Goodbye'?

    And Poland???!!!! Gaaah!!!!

    I don't think I ever read this one. And I have all of them, almost.

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  12. Betty Francesca,
    Sorry, they are two separate books. Next Monday Betty Keira will be reviewing No Need to say Goodbye.

    I fell into the same trap - I thought I had all of the books, and then when it came time for this one I ended up having to order one from Amazon.

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  13. I was a bit put off when I first read this one - I think it was Poland that threw me. Now I'm looking at it through new eyes - I'd forgotten about that amber lump under her blouse.

    Betty is the only one that could get away with sending her hero on vacation in the middle of the action.

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  14. I got it done! Yay, me!

    Oh, and this one is awesome. Okay, so Thomas is not my fave hero in The Canon ("Paging Dr. van Elven, paging Dr. van Elven...") but I liked Isobel a lot and this book definitely hit the bell on the Angst-o-meter. When Isobel realizes that she's in love with Thomas just as her stint as Nanny's nurse is over, it really seems that she'll never see him again.

    I'm not convinced Thomas knew that Isobel was the one while they were in Poland. So why did he buy the amber necklace? Because she liked it, sure, but maybe he thought it would be a nice "thank you for nursing my nanny" gift.

    The Mystery of Thomas's Trip. At one point, he's going to be going to the Far East. Then he's in the Caribbean with Ella, then he's back and wasn't it a shame about how Ella tracked him to Italy. All I can say is, I want his Frequent Flyer miles.

    Coincidences Department: 1) One of the patients Isobel nurses is in Hampstead (for about 8 hours, then he croaks), which is where Betty Henry used to live.

    2) The cottage in Orford: WHOO-HOO!! I have been there! For reals!!!! It was in 1976, I think (or maybe 1980) and neighbors of Betty Henry had a weekend place in Orford. Alas, the weekend place was modern construction and so not a charming, ivy-covered cottage in the village. And second alas, I only remember a) the rather drear interior of the Silvers' modern house AND a truly stupefying trip birding along the estuary & the North Sea. No REWs that I ever saw.

    And 3) then they go to Berkshire where Betty Ross lived, and they're maybe 5-10 miles from his house. Lechlede exists (I might have been there, but I'll have to check with Betty Ross), but I'm pretty sure Hinton Bassett is made up. But the village where Peter recovers from measles (chicken pox?) is Penn -- as in William Penn, as in Pennsylvania -- and that's also cool because the Penn family lived in Ruscombe, which is right down the road from Betty Ross's old house. I used to walk to Ruscombe quite a lot.

    *sigh* It's as if The Great Betty wrote a book all about my life...

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  15. How fun, Betty Mag! What are the chances that so many places that coincide with your stomping grounds. Bet it makes you feel like you Never Said Goodbye.
    (Sorry, couldn't restrain the quip lip. ;-)

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  16. This book doesn't appear to have been originally published in the US as a regular Harlequin; it's only been reprinted here. I have the ruby cover edition. This may be why some of you don't recognize it.

    I like the book a lot; Isobel never ever lets Thomas and his rudeness ruffle her but I would still like to know *when* he was able to sneak off and buy the amber necklace.

    And Nanny was great telling off Ella left and right.

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  17. Betty Debbie was just re-reading it and she tells me that he disappears for a half hour sometime after they hand-hold at the cathedral during the organ recital...

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  18. I too, thought I had all the books in the canon, then someone mentioned this one. I trotted to Amazon to buy it and read it last summer.
    I know we're the good guys, and I know they're crooked, but there was just something about the secrecy and underhanded goings on that bothered me. I'm such a wuss.
    (Maybe if Dr Van Elven was a shrink he could help me.)

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  19. By the way, awesome book review. Chuckled all the way thru it! LOVE the new cover art!

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  20. One of my favorite sentences in this book..."Very well, Dr. Winter-and the name is Barrington, there's no er in front of it."

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  21. It was all rather domestic (despite how the BRD managed his frequent flyers points).

    These books really should come with a health warning. If someone has a stroke you don't tuck them back in bed and hope for the best. Think F.A.S.T. and call an ambulance.

    It really is appalling, that Isobel's mother is quite happy to sacrifice Isobel's future for Bobby to have an education. It would be a decade of private nursing for Isobel to get Bobby through school and university.

    It was quite a dour read.

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  22. "I have ways of finding out."
    Did he say this in his usual accent? Because in my head, it sounded like Siegfried from Get Smart. Betty Neels: Spy Spoof Fan. (Those "hooded lids" -- a sly nod to the Cone of Silence!)
    Maybe there was more to that trip to Poland than just getting Nanny. Who knows how many microfiche dots could have been hidden on that amber necklace? And that's why he was in the Caribbean, or Italy... those cover stories are hard to keep straight. Ella was probably also a spy, and had no actual romantic intentions toward Thomas; she just had to keep to her character so Isobel wouldn't suspect anything and unintentionally torpedo their top-secret mission.
    Cute in this book how often Betty refers to Isobel reading to Nanny "simple romantic stor[ies] in which the girl was quite obviously going to marry the man before the last page"--more fuel for the theory that Mrs. Neels was getting tired of romances and wanted to branch out to spy or mystery stories.

    B. Baersma

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    1. I love the Get Smart reference, Betty Baersma! Now I’ll never be able to read this one again without hearing the “unique “ sound that everyone passing made on the dock in one episode (the only one I remember for sure was the guy with a wooden leg).

      You have come up with the perfect explanation for any inconsistency in a Betty book. They were obviously working for C.O.N.T.R.O.L. And the Nicks and Veronicas were with Kaos. And any MOCs had to be lived under the cone of silence. Brilliant!

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    2. You have figured it out correctly, Betty Meridith! Fortunately, we are all friends here, so there's no need to kill anyone for knowing too much. (Although we can't rule out being sent on a mission to Belgium, if you catch my drift.)
      And what was I thinking, complaining about the bikini? It was totally NOT inconsistent! Betty Neels knew very well that the code of spy thrillers *requires* gratutious flashing of female flesh, even if the heroine is "plain."

      (The episode about the POW camp in NJ thrilled me as a kid because it was set in the very town where I went to school! During recess I stood by the gate, hoping to see secret agents emerge from the manhole cover near the yard, until my older sister told me a) it wasn't real and b) it was in reruns anyway and had been filmed like 10 years earlier:(.)

      B. Baersma

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  23. Hypocrisy Alert: Nanny disapproves of Ella flaunting her decolletage at dinner parties, which is immodest but not unusual, but doesn't mind Isobel sunbathing in a bikini while working? And it's hypocritical for Isobel herself--for someone who is concerned with propriety and wearing a uniform it seems a pretty unprofessional decision, even if she is kind of on vacation. She doesn't think it would bother Nanny or the cleaning lady? I don't care how much I like the hired help, or my employer (assuming Nanny thought of Isobel as almost-Mrs.-Thomas), I wouldn't want them sitting across from me practically in their underclothes.

    B. Baersma

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    1. Yes! I agree! I mean in the first instance she may have thought "Oh we're just girls here" (maybe she even asked Nanny if it would be ok?) but when it comes to running to greet new arrivals effectively in your underwear...?
      Evie

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  24. The missing link? Could this be the mystery story with which Betty assuaged her yearning to write something other than those "simple romantic stories in which the girl was quite obviously going to marry the man before the last page"?
    "The Lost Holiday (Windswept #22)- Elizabeth Olsen - Google Bookshttps://books.google.com › books › about › Laura spends Christmas with her relatives in an isolated desert home, but begins to suspect something is wrong with her uncle."
    Betty elements: Elizabeth=Betty; Olsen=close anagram to Neels; Laura=popular Betty heroine name; relatives in isolated home=relatives in run down, financially burdensome ancestral home; suspicion=misunderstandings; the holiday season=a frequent Betty setting; published 1983=the same year as her thriller-est title!
    Ok, Scholastic YA is not Harlequin, but it's a foot in the door.
    Unfortunately, I am not fan enough to spend over $50 to get and read this book, so could not do any stylistic comparisons. But if anyone else is, please us know!

    B. Baersma

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    1. Betty Baersma, re.: The Lost Holidays by Elizabeth Olsen. I may be almost two years late with my comment, and maybe you were the one who bought the book that was sold on Etsy for 5 or 6 dollars and you already know. I wasn't willing to spend the enormous price they now ask for this book, either. But I spent hours copying & pasting my way through the most interesting parts of the story on Google Books, and I can tell you the style is quite unlike Betty's style.
      The book is written in the first person, the heroine is telling her story. It's a Scholastic YA, so, of course, it is a young adult story, set in the Colorado Desert. Front & back text:

      The Lost Holiday
      Left in the desert to die,
      Laura begins a deadly struggle for survival.

      Laura trusted her uncle,
      and he betrayed her.


      The Christmas that Laura spends
      with her aunt and uncle, in their
      isolated desert house, turns out to be
      the strangest—and deadliest—of her
      life. Lonely at first, Laura is pleased
      when Wendell, her aunt's long-lost
      younger brother, shows up. Wendell is
      funny and understanding...isn't he?
      Laura's not sure she can trust him.
      Sometimes Wendell seems almost
      ...cruel.
      Then comes the day when Wendell
      takes Laura for a drive—and doesn't
      plan to bring her back.

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    2. Wow, thank you so much! What truly Bettyesque initiative and commitment!
      No, I (thankfully) did not blow 5 bucks on Etsy for this and so was unaware of its manifest unsuitability as contender for the "Betty's Lost Mystery Title" title. The search continues...

      B. Baersma

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    3. Betty Baersma, there were Teenage Betty Plot Elements: there was a young man causing heartache for poor Laura when he showed up at a party with "the other girl".
      Betty Anonymous

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    4. Hmm. I'm getting more interested in reading this! Or just in finding out what hapens: Is Wendell actually the bad guy,--sometimes the RDD can seem "almost cruel." Does he not plan to bring her back...because he's taking her away to a better life in his lovely mansion staffed with old family retainers, with a stop for a new wardrobe on the way?

      B. Baersma

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    5. Betty Baersma, Laura's Uncle Wendell was a criminal who swindled middle-aged ladies out of their money. He said he made the mistake of marrying two of them without divorcing the first one. When the last one found out she threatened to turn him in to the police. He tied her up and left her in the basement. It wasn't until four days later that she was found.
      He really was a bad guy. He took Laura into the desert, tied up her feet and her left wrist and left her there with a flashlight, her jacket and some provisions...
      Betty Anonymous

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    6. Truly a villain! Worthy only of Betty's nastiest most psycho nannies/Veronicas, with them both being taken out in her trademark car or plane accident.

      B. Baersma

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  25. One more thing: in "A Girl to Love" (which gets better with every reading), published 1982--the year before this one--Woodley says (p. 260, large print ed.), "...though Mr. Trentham did tell me that he rather fancied doing one of these fashionable spy stories."
    Betty speaking for herself there?

    B. my last word on the topic b'n Baersma

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  26. I know that Betty liked to give her RBDs room to change and grow (under the all-important influence of the PBN) but Thomas was so very unpleasant it rather spoiled this one for me. Also, the bit where the Veronica chooses to shower and change in Isobel´s bedroom/bathroom, while nicely illustrating how vindictive she was, seemed really strange. Who would select a “used” bathroom when a private one was available? Rather like the cat that uses the unfavored person’s shoe as a litter box. Still, I applaud Betty for branching out.

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    1. Well, if you accept the theory (posited above in the note dated July 21, 2021) that this is Betty's spy novel, and that Thomas and the Veronica were simply working a case together, you could explain it that Ella had originally set up that bathroom as her transmission center (because no one else was using it so there was less of a chance she'd be overheard by the household help coming in to clean?) and didn't have a chance to get her lipstick-speaker and powder puff-receiver and her other 1970s spy paraphernalia out of there before Isobel was assigned to that suite.

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    2. I do love that image of the lipstick-speaker and powder puff-receiver. Agent 99 would have surely used them to call Maxwell Smart on his shoe-phone. It really improves this book for me!

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